The Me'am Lo'ez (מעם לועז‎), begun by Rabbi Yaakov Culi in 1730, is a commentary to Tanakh written in Ladino. It was subsequently translated to Hebrew and translated from the Hebrew to English in a fairly popular commentary in print. Does anyone know of a modern publishing house who has printed this in/with the original Ladino? When was the last time this was printed in Ladino?

HebrewBooks has a few Ladino editions. This one, for example, is from 1864; although Wikipedia says it was first published from 1730.
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b aJun 11 '12 at 4:13

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Ladino has been written in Hebrew and also in Latin characters (alphabets). The 1864 version b a's linked to uses Hebrew; I wonder whether any use Latin.
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msh210♦Jun 11 '12 at 6:42

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Beis Eked Sefarim - a bibliography of sefarim printed until 1950 - lists various editions, though the last ones (in Hebrew characters, at least) seem to have been at the end of the 1800s. R. Aryeh Kaplan, in his introduction to Bereishis, mentions an edition of most of Bereishis in Latin characters, done by a Spanish university in the 1960s; whether it was continued, I don't know.
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AlexJun 11 '12 at 17:16

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@Alex Any idea what the university is? I can try to track it down...
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minhagJun 12 '12 at 2:59

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@minhag: R. Kaplan's introduction is here. He says that it was done by the Ibn Tibbon Institute at the University of Granada. (That said, the Wikipedia article on Meam Loez quotes a review that says that it is full of inaccuracies.)
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AlexJun 12 '12 at 17:23

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The Meam Lo'ez are 17 volumes written in 150 years, I know you mean a Ladino with Hebrew letters Meam Lo'ez, but the last time printed in Ladino with Latin letters were in the 2006 by the National Authority of Ladino at Israel. The book is a recompilation of Selected text from Bereshit with its introduction, glossary and index, here the book Daalet le-Navon.

The cultural magazine Aki-Yerushalayim wrote about the book in Ladino (my English translation):

But since the Ladino began to be written in Latin letters at the
beginning of the 20th century, and that already grew 4 generations who do
not know the rashi letter, few can only read this book in our days,
what is a sin that meam Loez is a mine of knowledge not only from
religious point of view, also linguistic, literary and folkloric either.

There are already many years from the work to make a translation of
Meam Loez in Latin letters, especially for those who are studying the
Ladino and Judeo-Spanish literature. It is true that years ago was
take a first test, at the University of Granada, to make a
transliteration the Book of Genesis, but this was first cast with a
different graphic we use here, any way there are not more copies. A
response to the work of making a transliteration that suits the public
in Israel (and other countries too), was given on the initiative of a
group of friends of the President of the National Authority of Ladino,
Mr. Yitzhak Navon, on occasion of his eightieth birthday we decided to
honor him, publishing a transliteration in Latin letters, a selection
of Meam Loez Bereshit .